Love your videos of this beast of a combine. Cockshutt started developing this rotary in 1958 but was put on hold due to the White takeover in 1962. Development was accelerated again in early 70s. It lead the pack when it came out in 1979. No test facility could measure its top end. It was still a brute in 2010. Massey Ferguson still builds this machine today under the ownership of AGCO. However I’m sure you know all this. That combine will run a 35 foot header in small grains on low humidity climate country. You have a beautiful piece of classic Canadian heritage technology there. It is really nice to see people like you who treat machinery with respect. All your videos are excellent. Signed: An old Cockshutt fan from Prince Edward Island, Canada.
Whew, that was down pretty good right there! Yeah, hate the flat spot on the tires! Hey, that high-yielding crop might buy a half smoked cigar for Jeff! I do love rides in the 2-155! Everything's getting cheaper. Glad yields are good! Thanks for the video!
BurningDinosaurs probably was around here it might’ve been the 2-105 all together tho. I just see a lot of 2-155s and 35s around. I don’t know hard production numbers tho
Man I sure wished you would adopt me so I could farm in the land of 200 bushel corn! I’m a little bit surprised you guys have stuck with single axle trucks as long as you have but it seems like you don’t haul as far as us. 18-20 miles one way here most of the time
There is tops out on some corn around here, not much down yet. If we get a good wind that will probably change. We had a rear tractor tube stem come apart that was less than a year old. The threaded piece where the valve stem screws in separated from the tube. Are you going to have to put up storage for the organic grain or will you be able to deliver in the fall? Organic is a lot of work, I'm not sure it would be for me. We're kinda between a rock and a hard place here on HEL ground we're only allowed 1 tillage pass following corn that must leave 70% residue cover and no tillage following beans or wheat. Not much for options on weed control. I might dip my toe in the cbd hemp pool next year. I have a patch that hasn't had any residual chemicals on it for a few years and a potential market not too far away. It's a low overhead, low risk venture that I don't have to add any machinery for.
Dale Cornelius ya might have to put up storage or rent bins. Hopefully ur corn holds together. It’d be worth a shot to try another crop. I’m lookin forward to this organic crops. It’ll just take closer management I think. I bought a tye drill last week. Series V 20ft with no till
Probably got that 20' for less than a 15' would have been. In my area you can't get them through a lot of roads. Those are a good drill, here's a few pointers. If you dont own one already get a folding ruler with the brass slider in it, it makes checking your settings easier. Don't trust the little gauge on the end cup, measure a few across the drill. Zero out the cups so they will set uniformly. Don't overtighten the disk opener bolts, the boot is aluminum and the holes will strip out. The chart isn't as accurate as it should be. Don't try to plant gravel, the cups don't like that. If you need parts today, Suchomski Implement south of Nashville on 127. They stock pretty well everything on those drills, and white planters, some pull sprayers, and Hesston hay equipment. If you build bins put in aeration floors, pour your concrete high enough you dont have to dig a hole under the auger, incline augers are worth it, as are 8" unloads. Lay your site out to accommodate semis, you Will regret it if you dont. I believe you can use diatomaceous earth for insect control in organic. Good luck, if you need some guidance on your drill I'll help you best I can.
Dale Cornelius thanks for the tips. I’ll go through it and set the meters this winter. I got a parts drill bought too so I’ll have a bunch extra of those boots. Good thinking on the bin site. I know there’s something that can be used inplace of insecticide but can’t remember what
Does grandpa run the combine or cart or just stick to truck driving. I got a little single axle 377 peterbilt with an L10 in my shop I bought for some reason. Needs the radiator flushed and break shoes but haven't had time. Don't have a trailer yet but i thought for three grand it was good shape. Fall has been a complete disaster here, rain every day and now snow😭🔫
He just drives the truck now. Been prolly 6 or 7 years since the combine and 3 or 4 for the cart. That’s not to bad hopefully u can get it goin. Have something else to sit in lines at the elevator with
Shorter sidewalls should make for less expensive tires and a better ride, maybe... Not as much cushion, but not as much bouncing!! Big baler is a bitch for bouncing! You're like me... Plant every inch, then leave what you can't get to... LOL but it keeps the first clean!
Love watching the corn head views. Thanks Jake. Do you lose any ears off the front? Looked like some ears were bouncing around towards the front and could fall off.
At Midnight thanks for watching man. And no I bet I don’t see two or 3 go over the front all year. Butt shelling when it pulls the ears down off the stalk is where our and all other corn heads loose the most
Love your videos of this beast of a combine. Cockshutt started developing this rotary in 1958 but was put on hold due to the White takeover in 1962. Development was accelerated again in early 70s. It lead the pack when it came out in 1979. No test facility could measure its top end. It was still a brute in 2010. Massey Ferguson still builds this machine today under the ownership of AGCO. However I’m sure you know all this. That combine will run a 35 foot header in small grains on low humidity climate country. You have a beautiful piece of classic Canadian heritage technology there. It is really nice to see people like you who treat machinery with respect. All your videos are excellent.
Signed: An old Cockshutt fan from Prince Edward Island, Canada.
Sure do love seeing and hearing your field boss. Hope everything goes good for you folks.
Tires, tubes and rims are the main reason I went with a semi. Between hay wagons, gravity boxes, even livestock trailers it's hard to keep up.
It's always neat to see metal cornheads get shiny.
Thank you for the ride in the combine. Enjoyed the video.
nice to see someone driving the combine through the field, instead of auto steer.
Whew, that was down pretty good right there! Yeah, hate the flat spot on the tires! Hey, that high-yielding crop might buy a half smoked cigar for Jeff! I do love rides in the 2-155! Everything's getting cheaper. Glad yields are good! Thanks for the video!
BurningDinosaurs lol ya no kiddin! That’s a nice driving and reliable tractor. No wonder it was whites most popular model. Thanks for watching
@@jakeziegler599 Was it really? I didn't know that!
BurningDinosaurs probably was around here it might’ve been the 2-105 all together tho. I just see a lot of 2-155s and 35s around. I don’t know hard production numbers tho
Great Video, Always enjoy your videos of your Whites & other equipment. Keep the videos coming.
Chad Shafer thanks for watching bud
Jeff gonna have to bring up his new cart and help ! Lol
Ya he is!!!
Jeff Reymond I doubt it would pull it!
you can hear that 8.3 cummins in the cab good
My old JD picker would pick up small rocks too, and one bullfrog lol
Thanks for the updates & the ride alongs. Sounds like you getting some nice yields considering the year we've had. Stay safe.
Man I sure wished you would adopt me so I could farm in the land of 200 bushel corn! I’m a little bit surprised you guys have stuck with single axle trucks as long as you have but it seems like you don’t haul as far as us. 18-20 miles one way here most of the time
SoInFarm lol u could come up next fall and work for us! Ya most our hauls are only 4-7 miles and there usually good roads.
I feel the same way- there are a few bigger items I would like to buy, but a bunch of smaller things need to happen first!
Good video. Thanks for sharing.
Couple inches of rain followed by snow here, time to watch Jake harvest corn!
There is tops out on some corn around here, not much down yet. If we get a good wind that will probably change. We had a rear tractor tube stem come apart that was less than a year old. The threaded piece where the valve stem screws in separated from the tube. Are you going to have to put up storage for the organic grain or will you be able to deliver in the fall? Organic is a lot of work, I'm not sure it would be for me. We're kinda between a rock and a hard place here on HEL ground we're only allowed 1 tillage pass following corn that must leave 70% residue cover and no tillage following beans or wheat. Not much for options on weed control. I might dip my toe in the cbd hemp pool next year. I have a patch that hasn't had any residual chemicals on it for a few years and a potential market not too far away. It's a low overhead, low risk venture that I don't have to add any machinery for.
Dale Cornelius ya might have to put up storage or rent bins. Hopefully ur corn holds together. It’d be worth a shot to try another crop. I’m lookin forward to this organic crops. It’ll just take closer management I think. I bought a tye drill last week. Series V 20ft with no till
Probably got that 20' for less than a 15' would have been. In my area you can't get them through a lot of roads. Those are a good drill, here's a few pointers. If you dont own one already get a folding ruler with the brass slider in it, it makes checking your settings easier. Don't trust the little gauge on the end cup, measure a few across the drill. Zero out the cups so they will set uniformly. Don't overtighten the disk opener bolts, the boot is aluminum and the holes will strip out. The chart isn't as accurate as it should be. Don't try to plant gravel, the cups don't like that. If you need parts today, Suchomski Implement south of Nashville on 127. They stock pretty well everything on those drills, and white planters, some pull sprayers, and Hesston hay equipment. If you build bins put in aeration floors, pour your concrete high enough you dont have to dig a hole under the auger, incline augers are worth it, as are 8" unloads. Lay your site out to accommodate semis, you Will regret it if you dont. I believe you can use diatomaceous earth for insect control in organic. Good luck, if you need some guidance on your drill I'll help you best I can.
Dale Cornelius thanks for the tips. I’ll go through it and set the meters this winter. I got a parts drill bought too so I’ll have a bunch extra of those boots. Good thinking on the bin site. I know there’s something that can be used inplace of insecticide but can’t remember what
Semi would be nice but like you said there are lots of things that need to be bought
That old tractor sounds good , real good;;;;;;
No mud, looks like good conditions!
Does grandpa run the combine or cart or just stick to truck driving. I got a little single axle 377 peterbilt with an L10 in my shop I bought for some reason. Needs the radiator flushed and break shoes but haven't had time. Don't have a trailer yet but i thought for three grand it was good shape. Fall has been a complete disaster here, rain every day and now snow😭🔫
He just drives the truck now. Been prolly 6 or 7 years since the combine and 3 or 4 for the cart. That’s not to bad hopefully u can get it goin. Have something else to sit in lines at the elevator with
*Nice setup* #WorldsOkayestFarmer
Shorter sidewalls should make for less expensive tires and a better ride, maybe... Not as much cushion, but not as much bouncing!! Big baler is a bitch for bouncing!
You're like me... Plant every inch, then leave what you can't get to... LOL but it keeps the first clean!
Jake do like harvest videos.
Did you say that you are going to start looking into organic production?
Yep
is that a 2388
Love watching the corn head views. Thanks Jake. Do you lose any ears off the front? Looked like some ears were bouncing around towards the front and could fall off.
At Midnight thanks for watching man. And no I bet I don’t see two or 3 go over the front all year. Butt shelling when it pulls the ears down off the stalk is where our and all other corn heads loose the most
First!! Haha